a man running in orange county

a man running in orange county

A Story by Philip Gaber

1.

I got up, dressed, drank coffee, and lit a cigarette.

Walked to the bus stop.          

Boarded the crosstown bus.

Sat next to an older woman who smelled like Vicks VapoRub. 

She was reading The New Yorker.

Talk of the Town.

Every now and then, she'd giggle, but you could tell she was a little self-conscious about laughing in public because she'd quickly look out of the corner of her eye to see if anyone was watching her.  

But nobody was watching her.

We were all immersed in our own thoughts and feelings.

Awaiting our arrival to our destinations, our Point B's.

I was on my way to see my therapist.

Somebody suggested I might need one, so I figured, what the hell?

There are worse things to spend your money on.

I looked at the old lady. She had finished reading Talk of the Town and was now flipping pages.

Nothing seemed to interest her. I don't think she even looked at the articles' titles. 

She was looking for something to do until she reached her stop.

When she came to the last page, the old lady sighed. "It's a shame.  I spent a dollar seventy-five cents on this, and all I read was 'The Talk of the Town.'" 

"I did see you giggling a few times, Ma'am," I said.  "That's gotta be worth something."

The old lady thought about that and shrugged.

"That's one way to look at it," she said.

"Yes, Ma'am."

"You have an inborn gift for positive thinking."

"It's something in the genes," I said.

"Interesting," she said. 

We didn't say anything for the rest of the trip.

There really wasn't anything to say.

I've always had trouble making small talk with strangers, anyway. 

I made a mental note to discuss that with my therapist as I deboarded the bus.


2.

My therapist was running late.

"I apologize," she said. "It was domestic in nature."

"No problem."

I waited.

"Well, the floor is yours," she said impatiently.

I really didn't know where to begin.

And I didn't feel like telling her about my trouble with making small talk with strangers. 

Seemed insignificant.

"I'm sorry," I said. "I really don't have much to say today."

"You don't have much to say? Or do you choose not to have much to say?"

She had me.

Again.

"Can't fool you, can I?" I said. And then I felt ashamed for saying something so foolish.

"It's not about not fooling me," my therapist said.  "It's about not fooling yourself.  I've said this repeatedly."

That was her subtle little way of hitting me upside my head.

"However, if you really don't have anything to say..." she said.

I cleared my throat.  "Well, I..."  I stopped.

"Yooou...?" my therapist coaxed.

"I think I might be exercising too much."

It wasn't much.  But it had been something I'd been thinking about.

"How much do you exercise?"

"I run twice a day.  Ten miles. That's too much, isn't it?"

"So you run twenty miles a day?"

"No, ten.  Five in the morning, five at night."

"Are you training for a marathon?"

"No.  Well, yes.  Sort of."

"Which is it?"

"I'd like to... I don't know if I have it in me."

"You run every day?"

"Everyday."

"Mmm..."  She jotted something down on the pad in her lap.

"Is it something I should be concerned about?" I said.

"Have you mentioned this to your primary care physician?"

"No... Should I?"

"I was just curious what he had to say."

"Well, I was thinking this was more of a psychological thing than a... physical one."

"I can see where you'd get that idea.  I'm not disagreeing with you.   I guess the question is: Are you using running as an excuse to avoid other responsibilities or activities such as relationships, engaging in other hobbies, or spending time with family and friends?"

I thought about that.

"I see where you're going with this," I said.  "It's a good question, too. You wouldn't be too upset if I didn't answer that today, would you?"

"It's not my place to be overly upset.  I'm a therapist.  I'm trained to be impartial."

"That's good; I appreciate that.  Because I will have to mull that one over a bit before I give you that straightforward and thoughtful response you've come to expect from me."

My therapist winked at me playfully.  "I figured as much."


3.

After getting home, I went for a run and thought about what my therapist had said. 

So, I made an appointment with my primary care physician.


4.

"So you weren't very specific about your symptoms when you made this appointment," my doc said, consulting his chart.  "A general feeling of blah?  Can you describe blah for me?"

"I just told the lady at the appointment desk that so I could see you.  I'm here to get some advice.

You would have thought I'd questioned his oath to keep the sick from harm and injustice by the expression on his face.  "You're not sick?" he said.

"No, sir."

He shrugged. "Well, it's your copay," he said, lowering himself onto his stool.

"I know it's not the best use of your time..."

He just stared at me, like, OK, buddy, cut to the chase.

"Well, I was talking to my therapist yesterday..."  I waited to see if he would react, but he didn't.  He just kept looking at me, challenging me to keep his interest.  "I told her I'm pretty passionate about running, and I asked her if she thought I might be over-exercising, and one of the first things she wanted to know was, have I talked to you about it? Which I thought was a little strange..."

"Why would you talk to me about it?"

"Exactly."

"How do you feel when you're running?"

"I feel fine."

"No pain?  No discomfort?"

"Just the usual aches and..."  I was going to say pains, but I figured that would have immediately caused him to refer me to a specialist.

"And how often do you run?"

"Twice a day.  Ten miles."

"So that's what �" twenty miles a day?"

Why did everyone have so much trouble doing the math on that?

"No �" ten miles a day.  Five in the morning, five at night."

"OK.  And what did your therapist say?"

As if that mattered.

"She said it's possible I could be over-exercising if I'm using running as an excuse to avoid other responsibilities."

"That sounds good.  I agree.  I still don't know why she asked if you'd talked to me about it."

"I don't either."

"Your therapist sounds very insecure.  Would you like me to make a referral for you?  As long as you're here."

"Look, I'm not unhappy with my therapist.  I wanted to get a second opinion.

"Well, I can understand that.  Please don't feel pressured to accept my referral.  I mean, that's your call.  I was extending the offer.  Letting you know it's available."

"Thanks. But you're OK with me running twice a day?"

"I have no problem with it."

"As long as..."

"Really sounds like this is something for you and your therapist to hash out.  She's much more tuned in to that kind of stuff."

"You think?"

"Oh sure, sure.  Definitely."


5.

I needed a drink after that, so I stopped at Duffy's Tavern and ordered a Mojito.

"Tough day?" The Duff said.

"They're all tough days, Duff."

The Duff laughed.  "You're all roses and sunshine, ain't ya, kid?" 

Then I remembered something. 

"Duff, let me ask you something.  You've taken a few psychology classes."

"Yeah - so I can better understand some of the jerks here."

"What do you think's wrong with me?"

"What do I think?"

"Yeah �" best guess."

The Duff studied me intently.  In his mind, he was paging through all those Into to Psych textbooks he'd been required to read in high school and the nine community colleges he'd attended over the years.  After finding the right chapter and page number, he said, "I think you probably suffered a lot of emotional trauma in your youth."

"Really?"

The Duff shrugged.  "Just off the top of my dome."

I processed that.

"You were obviously short; probably skinny as hell, lot of pimples, hardly any friends. How close am I?"

"Closer than I'm willing to admit."

The Duff pumped his fist several times.  "Yes!  Still got it!"

"You know I didn't kiss a girl until I was twenty-six?"  I said.

"It happens."

"And I had to pay to kiss her."

"A hooker?"

"No, it was one of those booths at the county fair. You know, kiss the prettiest girl in town for fifty cents?"  I thought about that for a minute.  "No wonder I'm in therapy."

The Duff couldn't help but smile. 

"And here I am, forty-five years old, never been in a relationship. God, I sound like a serial killer, don't I?"

The Duff patted me on the shoulder.  "You're gonna be OK, buddy.  You're gonna find somebody.  For some guys, it just takes a little longer.  You're a late bloomer."

I had to laugh.

People had been calling me a late bloomer since junior high.

I don't know who said it first. 

My parents, my sister, or one of my teachers.

One of them.

It doesn't matter at this point.

It was just funny hearing somebody calling me a late bloomer at forty-five.

It sounds better than calling them a failure.

I thanked The Duff for listening, gave him a twenty for the drink, and told him to keep the change.


6.

During the bus ride back to my apartment, I thought about what The Duff had said. 

You know, about me suffering a lot of emotional trauma in my youth and all.

Even though I did get teased a lot for being short and skinny and having a lot of pimples, I had to admit that I teased myself more than anyone else teased me.

And, believe me, that can be a whole lot worse.


7.

When I got home, I changed into my running clothes and went for a run because running always makes me feel better. It also helps me process some of my therapist's insights, like her latest one about using running as an excuse to avoid other aspects of my life.

Now, that was deep.

That one kept rolling around inside my head.

I would take more than a few runs to sort that out.

A few miles into the run, I felt my phone vibrating. I usually ignore it, but I took it out of my pocket to see who was texting me.

It was Rosalie, bored as hell in her Laguna Beach cottage.

"let's sip Ketel One 2nite like it's your birthday."

The last time Rosalie and I sipped Ketel One, it was my birthday. We ended up at some frat party, sipping Everclear with strawberry Kool-Aid like it was my funeral.

"can't," I texted her back. "self-medicating with running," and I turned off my phone and put it back in my pocket.

As I looked toward the horizon, I noticed some glowing, ghostly-lit optical illusion above it. It made me think of the Flying Dutchman, the legendary phantom ship condemned to sail against the wind until Judgment Day.

That's exactly how I felt.

Adrift at sea, no place to dock, no safe harbor.

I looked at my pace watch. That damn 8.5 minute mile was still eluding me. I hadn't been able to get it under 10 since I went to that running clinic at the hospital where a licensed physical therapist performed an "initial comprehensive running evaluation" using "state-of-the-art Dartfish video analysis and a force plate treadmill" on me.

"You should focus more on a forefront strike than a heel strike," the licensed physical therapist said. "Keep your strike under your body, aligned with your hips and torso."

So I did.

That day, however, I must not have been focusing enough because as I was evaluating my foot strike and whether my hips and torso were properly aligned, I noticed I'd forgotten to double-knot my laces, which were dangling dangerously. When I finally decided to stop and retie them, the edge of my right heel caught the lip of a pothole. I lost my balance, spun around, tumbled hard to the pavement, and landed flat on my back.

Most runners would have gotten back up and started running again.

But not me.

I just laid there. Enjoyed it, too, to tell you the truth. Maybe because I knew I was just a little banged-up. Perhaps because I didn't feel like running anymore.

I thought it was interesting; even though I was lying down, I could still see that horizon. There were no illusions this time, just some light rays shining through clouds.

Then I turned my head slightly to the left and saw my reflection in a puddle of rainwater and immediately thought of Narcissus because, one time, my therapist called me "narcissistic."

That's not the face of a narcissus, I thought.  That's the face of a man experiencing general malaise and fatigue involved in a long-distance run against himself.

I laughed.

I thought I'd have to remember that line the next time I see my therapist.

She loves it when I challenge her insights.

She'll really get a kick out of it.

© 2024 Philip Gaber


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Featured Review

Nice flow, long where it should be long, short where it should be short. A dash of subtext, a smidge of exposition, and bob’s your uncle… I think. One idea, not that you’re into doing “treatments”… but what if you cut out the doctor and just did a back and forth between visits to the shrink and visits to the bartender?? The running part could be the vehicle for the existential crisis part… just playing with an idea. Keep firing ‘em in here.

Posted 5 Months Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Philip Gaber

5 Months Ago

I wanted the contrast of perspectives from the 2 different docs. I thank you for throwing ideas my w.. read more



Reviews

Nice flow, long where it should be long, short where it should be short. A dash of subtext, a smidge of exposition, and bob’s your uncle… I think. One idea, not that you’re into doing “treatments”… but what if you cut out the doctor and just did a back and forth between visits to the shrink and visits to the bartender?? The running part could be the vehicle for the existential crisis part… just playing with an idea. Keep firing ‘em in here.

Posted 5 Months Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Philip Gaber

5 Months Ago

I wanted the contrast of perspectives from the 2 different docs. I thank you for throwing ideas my w.. read more

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Added on June 3, 2024
Last Updated on June 3, 2024

Author

Philip Gaber
Philip Gaber

Charlotte, NC



About
I hate writing biographies. I was one of those kids who rode a banana seat bike and watched Saturday morning cartoons and Soul Train. But my mother would never buy any of those sugary cereals for us k.. more..

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